Alabama DMV Practice Test 9
80% Passing score
20 Questions
4 Mistakes allowed
If you’re getting ready for the Alabama DMV practice test, this ninth Alabama practice permit test is a smart place to slow down and pay attention, especially because it focuses on one rule Alabama does not treat lightly: school buses. And honestly, that is one of those rules people think they know until the test starts asking about divided highways, stopped traffic, flashing lights, and which side of the road you’re actually on. It gets a little more specific than “see bus, stop,” which is exactly why this practice DMV permit test is useful. This Alabama permit practice test gives you 20 multiple-choice and true or false questions, with 16 correct answers needed to pass. The questions are built from the Alabama Driver Manual, the same source used for the official learner license knowledge test. That matters. The real test covers Alabama traffic laws, road signs, safe-driving rules, and material from the manual, so guessing from general driving knowledge is not the great strategy it sometimes feels like it should be. Now, the official Alabama knowledge test is commonly treated as a 30-question exam where you need 24 correct answers, or an 80% score, to pass. This practice test is shorter, yes, but it still puts you in the right testing mindset. It makes you read carefully, catch the little wording traps, and deal with the kind of Alabama-specific road rules that can feel obvious until they are sitting in front of you in multiple-choice form. There is also the practical side of the licensing process, because of course there is. Alabama knowledge testing is handled through ALEA Driver License offices, the test fee is $5 per attempt, and automated testing is available for applicants. Road signs are folded into the main DMV written test, not handed off to some separate little sign quiz, so you still need to know regulatory signs, warning signs, traffic signals, pavement markings, and all those details people tend to half-study. For 15-year-old applicants, passing the required exam is part of getting a restricted learner license. Applicants 16 and older may also need a learner license if they are still getting instruction. Either way, expect the usual identity documents, school enrollment proof for younger applicants, fees, and a vision screening. Use this Alabama DMV learners permit test like a rehearsal, not a shortcut. It helps you get ready for the real test at the office, and more importantly, for actual Alabama roads where school bus rules are not theoretical.